Donald Trump Jr. denies rumors of a New York governor bid — but says he may run for office someday

NEW YORK (AP) — Donald Trump Jr., rumored to be eyeing a move to follow his father's footsteps into politics, will not be a candidate for governor of New York next year but is not ruling out a possible run for office in the future.

Donald Trump Jr. at the Republican National Convention in July.
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
NEW YORK — Donald Trump Jr., rumored to be eyeing a move to follow his father's footsteps into politics, says he will not be a candidate for governor of New York next year but is not ruling out a possible run for office in the future.

The younger Trump, in an interview Monday with The Associated Press, categorically denied any speculation that he might challenge incumbent Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

"I am not running in 2018," Trump said in his first public comments about a possible candidacy next year.

But he acknowledged having been bitten by the politics bug and said he could consider a run down the road.

The political future of Trump, who along with his brother Eric has taken the helm of the Trump Organization since their father took office, has been the subject of repeated speculation since he played a very active role as a campaign surrogate for much of the past two years. His well-received speech at last summer's Republican National Convention electrified conservative circles and sparked talk that he might run for mayor of New York City.

But the Republican nominee squashed that talk almost immediately, as did Trump Jr. again Monday.

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"People keep asking me: When are you running for mayor?" he said. "Well, I'm not. If I was, New York City mayor is much less interesting to me than perhaps other things like governor of a state. That's not saying I'm running. It's just saying that, hey, if I ever did something, I'd probably be more interested in something like that."

But Trump has long been comfortable in conservative circles and is scheduling a few high-profile appearances at Republican events including a fund-raiser in Texas last month and one in Indiana next month. Speculation about his political future picked up again in recent days after The New York Post's Page Six reported that he told members of a Long Island club that he'd be interested in running for office. While making clear that he was not ruling out a future run, Trump also revealed that he shared his father's distrust of much of the media.

"If I say no," Trump said, the media would say "he's never going to do it," adding that if he changed his mind, "they try to kill you with it." He added: "You always leave your options open."

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Ed Cox, the head of the New York State Republican Party, called the younger Trump "a very capable individual who would do very well at anything he wanted to do, including politics." But Cox also indicated that being patient might be the right approach.

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"The first duty of a member of the first family is to help the president be the best president he can be," said Cox, who is a son-in-law of former President Richard Nixon. "The fact that he is not looking beyond that would be probably be the right decision on his part."

Trump, a father of five, said he had respected a "firewall" between the workings of the White House and the Trump Organization. Though he says he has spoken to his father more frequently in recent weeks, the two men do not discuss the details of the family business or the policies of the West Wing, he said.

But the younger Trump closely watches the doings in Washington and believes that any of the White House's early stumbles are "understandable" because of the team's governing inexperience, and he said his father would soon be considered a "phenomenal" president. He singled out the decision to launch missile strikes on Syria in the aftermath of a chemical attack as a moment of strength.

"I think it's important that we show that America has its resolve back," he said. "I've seen more in the last two months than I've seen in the last two administrations in terms of fulfilling promises."